Blue Notes: The Blues have won two of their last three games at Nationwide Arena and have won 10 of their last 13 against the Blue Jackets overall. Alexander Steen has a four-game point streak at Nationwide Arena (one goal, four assists). Jaroslav Halak will start in goal against St. Louisan Mike McKenna, who played with the Peoria Rivermen last season. Jaden Schwartz has five goals and seven assists in his last 11 games.

Season series: After competing for years as rivals in the Central Division, these teams are playing for the first time since the Columbus Blue Jackets moved into the Eastern Conference's new Metropolitan Division. The St. Louis Blues won three of four against Columbus last season.

Big story: St. Louis has been arguably the NHL's most consistent team this season. Columbus has not matched that consistency but has gone 4-1-0 in December and has an opportunity to climb the division standings with three of its next four games at Nationwide Arena.

Team Scope:

Blues: St. Louis recently experienced a rare losing stretch, dropping three of four with all three losses coming against California teams. But the Blues rebounded this week with wins against a pair of Canadian franchises. Following a 2-1 road win against the Winnipeg Jets on Tuesday, the Blues welcomed the Toronto Maple Leafs to Scottrade Center on Thursday.

St. Louis scored three times in the first period, and Chris Stewart gave the Blues a commanding 4-0 lead 29 seconds into the second. Nazem Kadri replied 76 seconds later, but Alexander Steen scored his 22nd of the season 7:04 into the third and the Blues eventually wrapped up a 6-3 win.

"We jumped on them early," said forward Jaden Schwartz, who had a three-point night. "We threw a lot of pucks on net. We got a lot of second-chance opportunities tonight. Everyone played well."

St. Louis' wins came with Adam Cracknell in the lineup and Magnus Paajarvi a healthy scratch, although Cracknell is looking for his first point of the season.

Blue Jackets: A difficult season for Columbus appeared even more challenging when franchise goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky was lost for a month with a groin strain on Dec. 3. But the Blue Jackets have gone 3-1-0 since losing the Vezina Trophy winner and received solid goaltending from some unlikely sources.

That was especially the case Thursday at Madison Square Garden against the New York Rangers, when Curtis McElhinney was forced to leave after one period with a lower-body injury. With Columbus up 3-1, Mike McKenna came in relief and stopped 17 of 18 shots in his first NHL action since Dec. 2, 2010 to secure a 4-2 win that saw Artem Anisimov score against his former team.

Despite the unusual circumstances, McKenna felt comfortable in net and he will get the start Saturday against his hometown team.

"You play this game so long. It's not like I'm 15 years old. I'm 30 years old. I've done this for a while," McKenna said. "You go in and you play your game. You do your best and try to play within yourself. It worked out for us tonight."

With McElhinney out short-term, Columbus called up Jeremy Smith from the American Hockey League on Friday.

Who's hot: Schwartz has two goals and four points in his past three games, and Blues captain David Backes has three goals and four points in that span. … Blue Jackets forward Matt Calvert has goals in three straight games, and linemate Cam Atkinson has six points in his past four games. Forward Ryan Johansen has nine points during a career-high seven-game point streak.

It's amazing how professional sports can bring out the bipolar in people... Thursday night driving home from work listening to the BJ's/Rags game on the radio I was ecstatic when the Jackets made it 4-2 to seal the win against NY. Tonight I (obviously) want Columbus to get demolished early and often.

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Granted, we scored first in this one, but I'm not exactly enjoying this trend of giving up 3-4 goals in the first period. We used to be known for being particularly stingy in the first. Is it Halak needing a little time to settle down?

I was at the game. I can't fault Halak for a couple of those goals, especially the 5 on 3. Great character coming back though. Halak kept it in reach so they could come back. Sure, I'd like to stay out of the penalty box more, but I thought some of those calls were questionable.

Since Stewart had a fairly major role in getting these 2 points, are we rolling in the general direction of heaping (unwarranted) praise on him, or do we still all agree he's a lazy slug who only plays hard when the mood strikes and that he still needs to go?

glen a richter wrote:Since Stewart had a fairly major role in getting these 2 points, are we rolling in the general direction of heaping (unwarranted) praise on him, or do we still all agree he's a lazy slug who only plays hard when the mood strikes and that he still needs to go?

I don't think anyone here is ready to make any long-term forward-looking statements just based on two good games he has Putin. I think we are just excited about the fact that he got points, and that those points actually mattered and weren't like a fifth blues goal in a 5-0 win. Maybe the line is clicking a bit, maybe Stewart is picking the pace up, who knows. He did well. Pat on the back. Move on.